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Barriers to Effective Communication I01:30

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A communication barrier is any distortion or interruption during a conversation, resulting in miscommunication of the message. A good communicator should know these barriers and continuously check for the listener's understanding by obtaining feedback.
Communication barriers include the following:
Physiological barriers: They are limitations caused by a person's health condition or disability, such as hearing loss, poor eyesight, illness, or unconsciousness. An example to overcome this...
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Barriers to Effective Communication II01:21

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The barriers to effective communication also include cultural barriers, semantic barriers, gender barriers, and time constraints.
Cultural barriers:
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Semantic barriers:
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The Scientific Method01:32

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The scientific method is a detailed, empirical problem-solving process used by biologists and other scientists. This iterative approach involves formulating a question based on observation, developing a testable potential explanation for the observation (called a hypothesis), making and testing predictions based on the hypothesis, and using the findings to create new hypotheses and predictions.
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The Scientific Method02:40

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Chemistry is an empirical science. Scientists often pose questions to understand the chemistry in everyday life and seek answers to these questions. To achieve this, scientists follow a definitive series of steps that together make up the Scientific Method. This approach involves making observations, asking questions, building a hypothesis, conducting experiments, analyzing results, and forming a conclusion. 
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Physiological barriers are semi-permeable cellular structures restricting drug diffusion into intracellular compartments and tissues. There are six types of physiological barriers: blood endothelial, cell membrane, blood-brain, blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), blood-placenta, and blood-testis barriers.
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Ole Isacson: Development of New Therapies for Parkinson's Disease
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Structural barriers to scientific progress.

K Cowtan1

  • 1Department of Chemistry, University of York, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom.

Acta Crystallographica. Section D, Structural Biology
|October 6, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Structural biases within science hinder collaboration, disadvantaging users of software and data. These biases, rooted in social structures, may perpetuate gender disparities in scientific participation.

Keywords:
biascareersgenderpay

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Area of Science:

  • Social sciences
  • Sociology of science
  • Gender studies

Background:

  • Structural biases embedded in societal frameworks can reinforce divisions between privileged and underprivileged groups.
  • Identifying these intrinsic biases from within is challenging due to their pervasive nature.

Discussion:

  • The social structures within science may inadvertently discourage collaboration, negatively impacting software and data users.
  • Hierarchical structures in science could be a contributing factor to these collaborative barriers.

Key Insights:

  • Scientific social structures can create barriers to collaboration, particularly for software and data users.
  • Hierarchies within science may exacerbate existing inequalities.

Outlook:

  • Further investigation into scientific social structures is needed to identify and mitigate biases.
  • Addressing these structural issues could promote greater inclusivity and equity in scientific participation, potentially reducing gender disparities.